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Tuesday March 11, 2009

New Study Confirms Importance Of Retaining An EU Commissioner

"We now have a clear choice to make regarding Irish membership of the European Commission. If the Lisbon Treaty enters into force, the Commission to be appointed later this year and all future Commissions will have an Irish member."

The Minister for Foreign Affairs, Micheál Martin, T.D., has announced the publication of an additional report by Professor Richard Sinnott and a team from the UCD Geary Institute on voting behaviour in the Lisbon Treaty referendum.

The report sheds further light on the reasons behind last year's referendum result. It highlights public concern at the time that Ireland would lose its right to a European Commissioner.

Commenting on the report, Minister Martin said that, "Ireland has now secured an important agreement which responds directly to various public concerns that are highlighted in Professor Sinnott's study.

"We now have a clear choice to make regarding Irish membership of the European Commission. If the Lisbon Treaty enters into force, the Commission to be appointed later this year and all future Commissions will have an Irish member. This concession to Ireland deals with a key reservation that Irish people had about the Lisbon Treaty last year.

"In addition, we are to receive legally-binding guarantees in the areas of taxation, defence and neutrality and on certain provisions of our Constitution relating to the right to life, education and the family.

"Our European partners are ready to give us the legal guarantees we require. This amounts to a very significant European response to the verdict of the Irish people last June. When these legal guarantees are finalised, they will provide a highly positive basis for a referendum later in the year," he concluded.

The report, prepared by Professor Richard Sinnott, Professor of Political Science, University College Dublin (UCD) and a team from UCD's Geary Institute, indicates that a prime concern was that there should always be an Irish member of the European Commission, with 80% of Irish people believing this to be an important issue.

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